Literary usage of Kinesthesia

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1.The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1913)"they use their eyes, sometimes, to start a voluntary movement and to stop it
mostly, and they use their spinal, unconscious kinesthesia to furnish it force, ..."

2.Psychological Review by American Psychological Association (1894)"Interpretation is wholly blind to us save on the kinesthetic basis, as the writer
has tried to show in some notes already printed on kinesthesia. ..."

3.The Esthetics of Motion, with Special Reference to the Psychology of Grace by Paul Souriau, George Henry Browne (1917)"If Vision is the Queen of the senses, kinesthesia (the sense of movement, posture,
weight, shape, adjustment, and pressure) is the King of them all, ..."

4.Moto-sensory Development; Observations on the First Three Years of a Child by George Van Ness Dearborn (1910)"There are other illustrations, striking enough as beheld, that touch (and
kinesthesia) are more closely involved in the motor mechanism than is vision. ..."

5.Text-book of Psychiatry: A Psychological Study of Insanity for Practitioners by Emanuel Mendel (1907)"... and to distinguish between hyperesthesia and neuralgia, kinesthesia and
paralysis, and to designate hyperesthesia as melancholia, kinesthesia as mania, ..."

7.The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1911)"The term organic sensations is used here in its broadest sense, comprising
kinesthesia or sensations of muscular movements or innervation, ..."